Friday, 7 December 2007

Xmas Sale at Stamp-Collector.co.uk

10% off everything at
my stamp site now

The only exception being within the Accessories Section. In addition hundreds of new issues added for Great Britain, Channel Islands, Isle of Man and Canada. More new lots will be added every week. Keep visiting - you might just find what you are looking for.

Missing some of the Business Sheet Panels - take a look - a whole new section within the GB tab.

Send me your wants list for any country and I will try to help you locate them.

Saturday, 4 August 2007

My Decades - Episode 1 - The 60's

My culture has been influenced by music and I have been listening to music for 5 decades now, have to say I don't really remember the 50's but neither Rock and Roll nor Country and Western do anything for me - Elvis and Dolly Parton - you can keep for a start. If I had to choose just one artist from the 50's that I will listen to it is probably Buddy Holly.

Having come to that (very easy) decision I decided to think about the favourites of the decades I lived through.

Of course there are other lists I can include (so I will) but music was probably the most important to me.

We moved up north from London in the early 60's and as a young teenager I was into what I see to remember was called "Mod" music - the Kinks, the Who, Small Faces graduating onto the harder sounds of the Rolling Stones, Cream, Buffalo Springfield and especially the Doors. Funnily enough I was never much of a Beatles fan at the time - I put it down to my rebellious streak as your parents could live with you listening to mummy's boy Paul McCartney - but not bad boy Jagger.

Altogether the sixties, at least from '64 onwards was a superb time to be going through your teens, and I don't mean all that "peace man" stuff which I could live with but "oop north" we were a bit out of the "swinging sixties" culture. No I mean the music of that time was inventive with most artists having something different to offer unlike the multiple boy bands of today (I will get to the '00s another time).

To the lists - but don't forget we didn't have iPODs, video tracks, CDs, even tape players were rare and very poor quality if you had one. No - you bought your music on vinyl, 7" Singles (or 45's) and 12" Albums (although they did play at 33rpm not 78). My first record player, after graduating from using Dad's side-board sized gramophone, was an orange and cream "Elizabethan" that eventually I had to have a weight on the arm before it would play without jumping! All my pocket money went on Melody Maker and NME (New Musical Express) both long gone now but a bit different from the musical comics of today. Oh and the occasional Rolling Stone magazine when I could find (and afford) it.

  • First single bought: Monday Monday - Mamas and Papas (yeah OK - peace man)
  • First album bought: Live at Kelvin Hall - Kinks (this was a concert venue in Glasgow I believe).
  • Favourite Artist of the era: The Doors
  • Favourite Single: Difficult choice so many good ones but to be firm and just pick one: Light my Fire - The Doors
  • Close seconds: See Emily Play - Pink Floyd, My Generation - The Who and Alone Again Or - Love.
  • Favourite Album: Village Green Preservation Society - The Kinks
  • Close seconds: Everybody Knows This is Nowhere - Neil Young, In Search of the Lost Chord - Moody Blues and Waiting for the Sun - Doors
  • Best Instrumental: Albatross - Fleetwood Mac
  • Freakiest record of the era: Got to be MacArthur Park - Richard Harris - unbelievable - 8 minutes of torture but unmissable.
  • One Hit Wonders: The Turtles (Elenore), The Flowerpot Men (Let's Go to San Francisco)
  • Worst record of the era: Has to be Sugar Sugar - The Archies - absolutely AWFUL.
  • Best Live Venue: The Hammersmith Odeon
  • First Gig: (gotta get in with the language of the day) The Who - Nantwich Civic Hall Jan 1st 1968.
  • Most Disappointing Gig: The Isle of Wight Festival 1969. Travelled all the way down just to see the Doors, having been a fan since Hello, I Love You .... and they were POOR.
When I was growing up in the this decade - it was fashionable for the young to have Communist leanings - not that any of us really had a clue what this meant. I went through the phase and my two favourite books of the time were at totally opposite ends of this political spectrum.

A Biography of Lenin - can't remember who wrote it but it was fascinating and HUGE. The second was Animal Farm by George Orwell, I happened to study this for "O" Level but found I was reading it because I actually enjoyed it. By the way kiddies - "O" Levels were difficult GCSEs to try and equate it (sorry!).

Finally on the reading front, one of the other classics I had to study was Shakespeare's Henry V, again a really good read and 40 years later I can still remember parts of the more famous speeches - strange the things you remember. I can only say my reading titles have somewhat deteriorated when I look back at my 60's list. Mind you I was also working my way through most of Agatha Christie and Leslie Charteris' "Saint" books from the local library (I had better things at that time to spend what little pocket-money I had than on books).

I was never much of a film buff (still not really) but I guess the film of the decade had to be Clockwork Orange, which was considered so horrific by the film censors that it never saw the light of day on general release until the 80's - this would seem strange now as it is relatively tame to some of those issued these days. If I had to choose my particular favourite of the time then it would be one of the early Bond films (i.e. those with Sean Connery starring).

As stated above there were very few technical innovations (from a teenager's point of view at least) at that time - television was just about graduating to 3 channels with the arrival of BBC2 but it was all pretty awful except one or two - Danger Man springs to mind (John McGoohan's first real exposure on TV i.e. pre-The Prisoner), Z-Cars after Dixon of Dock Green was finally killed off (again! Anybody who saw the film The Blue Lamp released in 1949 will know what I mean).

Of course I mustn't forget the Westerns of the time which were very popular like Wagon Train (who remembers Ward Bond and Robert McCulloch) and Rawhide (this is where a young Clint Eastwood kick-started his career and he remained a favourite through the next few decades).

Of course the parents controlled the switches (and I do mean switches - believe it or not we had to get up off the chair to turn the TV over) so choice was even more limited - you might laugh at Morecambe and Wise now - at the time it was pure torture.

But actually we didn't care (because we knew no different). We played football day and night and all weekend in all weathers, with whoever had a ball and on any relatively flat surface and as we got into middle/late teens we just replaced the football with females and sometimes both.

I can remember losing more than one girl by forcing her to accompany me to my"organised" games and she would have to stand in pouring rain, while I slid around kicking lumps out of anything that moved (sometimes even the ball). Great!

As far as I can remember 63/64 was about the time I started supporting Arsenal - a throwback to my birthplace and I had to keep something of the old home after being transplanted so far away (well it seemed like it at the time). Joe Baker - now that was a player - the Thierry Henry of his day (well OK maybe not - but certainly the John Radford). Sorry but if you don't know the Arsenal of the sixties you haven't a clue what I am talking about.

I tell you - at that time I had to take some REAL stick - Arsenal were useless, absolutely useless until 1968 - I know you wouldn't believe it now but there you go Leeds fans (although of course we haven't been relegated from the top division since 1913, something NO other current top team can say) maybe you will have something to look forward to in 20 years!

Everybody around me either supported Man U, Liverpool or at a stretch Everton - nobody supported southern teams except other refugees from that end of the country. A bit different now with all the Arsenal (and more recently Chelsea) shirts around the town.

While on the topic of football - of course I can't let it pass that this was the ONLY time we won the World Cup so - if you are under 50 hard luck - you missed it - 'cause it ain't likely to happen again for another 50!

Next time I will move onto the 70's. - which just happens to coincide with the end of my school days and I was forced out into the jungle known as "the working environment" and also the start of the rebirth of Arsenal as a World Power.

Monday, 30 July 2007

New Machin Forum - continued ....

The forum has been going for 3 weeks now and some good active conversations taking place.

Have had three very important positive testimonials from those I would call "experts" in the field so we are gradually getting people who can answer the questions posed by the "not so expert" (like me for instance).

What is the one defining point that has arising in the messages so far.

You almost certainly have to have a copy of the Deegam handbook in order to "identify and manage" Machins properly.

You can obtain yours via this link: E-mail deegam@btopenworld.com>

Major problem so far - having to waste time removing posts and ids of people who just want to ruin everybody else's fun by posting adverts for porn and generally unwanted stuff. Fortunately not too many at the moment but I just don't understand how doing this gives these sickos any thrills - I think they need to get a life.

Saturday, 21 July 2007

Too Many UK Stamp Issues - Sign the Petition

Someone in the UK has started to do something about it by raising a petition to the Royal Mail.

Unfortunately it needs 1000's of signatures for RM to even look at it seriously.

If you collect UK issues - wherever you are domiciled - and of course if you agree there are too many issues - please take a minute to sign this and add your own comments if you wish.

Sign The Petition Here Now


I have included the significant part of the original email I received.

Do you think the British Royal Mail is issuing too many stamps?
We get letters from collectors every week complaining that there are just too many stamp issues and they can't keep up.

We couldn't agree more. Do you? If so, PLEASE sign our on-line petition – and pass it on!

What's it all about? We are campaigning to stop Royal Mail issuing so many stamps each year.

Why? You might think that, from a cover producer's point of view, we must love all these extra stamp issues. Doesn't it make more money for us?

The answer is "no"!

Long term, we believe too many stamps is killing the hobby. Many cover collectors have given up all together because they just can't afford (or find storage space!) for all the extra covers each year.

And designing and producing (let alone arranging autographs for) this high number of covers (sometimes at the last minute, like this year's Harry Potter issue), is difficult and stressful.

We love many of the stamps being issued at the moment. The Beatles, Grand Prix and World of Inventions sets this year are especially terrific. And Harry Potter is a fabulous issue, which we hope will encourage kids to start collecting.

But! While Royal Mail is getting it right with many of the designs, we think they are getting it wrong with the sheer number of stamp issues. There were 3 stamp issues in July alone! And once you add Smilers sheets, miniature sheets and prestige booklets into the picture, it really is becoming unsustainable.

Please help us and the rest of the collecting community by signing our petition!

Ironically - just as I was about to post this I received yet another email from Royal Mail - this time advertising the "Scouts" issue of 26th July.

Monday, 16 July 2007

Stamp Mounts


As some of you will know I sell a couple of accessories on my marketplace site: http://www.stamp-collector.co.uk. I am going to add to that over the next week.

Due to the fact that most of my specialist albums require mounts, I have collected quite a few over the past couple of years, including some really different pre-cut sizes. I will be offering some of these (all will be unopened new packets) at much cheaper prices than normal retail (compare prices at this retail site http://tinyurl.com/ywbtju ).

I will offer a large variety of sizes and even some strips so that if you want to cut them to pre-determined sizes you can. Supplies are not inexhastible at these prices so jump in quick if you want them as I won't be buying any more.

UK Postage will be minimum £1 for up to 5 packets, or two strips, then discounted for each subsequent packet or strip, which could mean each packet costing as little as 20p for postage if you purchase multiple packs.


TIP OF THE DAY: It is probably more cost efficient if you buy certain accessories from the country you live in; as postage charges to send them outside the country of origin are usually prohibitive.

Sunday, 8 July 2007

New Machin Forum - continued ....

OK - The forum has been up for just under 48 hours and I have 7 members, written some FAQs and found my first real problem.

I wanted to copy a post from one topic to another but leave the original in place. No can do.
Well to be exact - you can do it but it requires an unsupported MOD that I am not willing to experiment with in case it brings down the whole forum. I can't afford for the site to be down just as I have got it up so I will have to leave this until I can create a test site to make the changes on.
I need to do that anyway for future upgrades so it is on my to-do list.

Haven't got any "experts" to sign up yet which is a bit disappointing but it is early days yet.

Most of those signed up like the idea - but are not really contributing yet - almost like waiting for something to happen. I need to find something to generate their interest but I am struggling to do so at the moment - something controversial. The best item I have found so far isn't even really Machin related.

Saturday, 7 July 2007

New Machin Forum Unveiled

So Day 1 is 07/07/07 - I like that.

I have finally completed my Forum - I have been searching for a Machin forum for ages and could never find one so I turned my technical talents to creating one (hee hee).

I started it in YABB, but I found the administration of that a bit frustrating so I turned to phpbb and created it using this utility. Much easier to control, definitely more user friendly.

Anyway - now it needs publicity - so if you know of anyone who would be interested please let them know. The link is at the top of this page on the left.

As this is an entirely new venture for me both in the creation and moderation of a forum - I will let you know how things go. Hopefully within a week I can report 5,000 new members - yeh right!

TIP OF THE DAY - If you want to create a forum use phpbb rather than YABB.

About Me

You can read all about me in my blogs.

This had me in stitches